|
General Sport and Hobby Talk General chat about anything sport or hobby related. |
|
|
Welcome to Accrington Web!
We are a discussion forum dedicated to the towns of Accrington, Oswaldtwistle and the surrounding areas, sometimes referred to as Hyndburn! We are a friendly bunch please feel free to browse or read on for more info. You are currently viewing our site as a guest which gives you limited access to view most discussions and access our other features. By joining our free community you will have access to post topics, photos, play in the community arcade and use our blog section. Registration is fast, simple and absolutely free, so please, join our community today!
|
11-09-2012, 08:43
|
#16
|
Full Member
Join Date: Aug 2012
Posts: 228
Liked: 0 times
Rep Power: 3478
|
Re: Have the Olympics changed your World?
Quote:
Originally Posted by garinda
It's been no more jingoistic than any other international sporting competition.
Might write the odd good ditty, but Morrissey's a fool.
Some of what I've seen this summer at the Games was very moving, and showed off the best human qualities there are. Mainly that effort, self-discipline, steely grit, and determination are great qualities to possess.
Was it worth all the extraordinary expense? Not in my opinion.
Will the supposed national 'feel good' factor last? No.
Am I glad I got to watch it, and was I moved to tears by the efforts of better people than myself, especially in the Paralympics?
Yes.
|
For once I totally agree with you. My sentiments entirely.
__________________
These are my principles and if you don't like them------well, I have others. (Groucho Marx)
|
|
|
11-09-2012, 08:47
|
#17
|
Resting in Peace
Join Date: Oct 2005
Location: In a state of confusion
Posts: 36,973
Liked: 715 times
Rep Power: 76552
|
Re: Have the Olympics changed your World?
Quote:
Originally Posted by kestrelx
Mmm I understand where Morrisey is coming from - why does everything revolve around the Queen and her spawn?
The Olympics is basically a circus and it's influence will wane in time.
I just wonder perhaps if demands on normal disabled people will be too much in the light of those super hero's of the paralympics. Should we judge disabled people generally off the example
shown in this sporting event? I don't think we should!
|
Well wouldn't expect anything else from you
__________________
35 YEARS AND COUNTING
|
|
|
11-09-2012, 09:49
|
#18
|
Full Member
Join Date: Aug 2012
Posts: 228
Liked: 0 times
Rep Power: 3478
|
Re: Have the Olympics changed your World?
The Paralympians were phenomenal!! Nothing can take away from their amazing achievements. However the question is continually being posed now about whether or not this will change people's views of the disabled.
I think not!
Why should it? Have the achievements of the Olympics made anyone change their attitudes to the able-bodied? The thing is that the paralympians are an extremely special breed, just as their able-bodied counterparts are. Just because someone with no legs can run faster than me (a truly wonderful achievement) doesn't mean that I or anyone else will look any differently open an "ordinary" disabled person. The mind just doesn't work like that. People who achieve greatness (in whatever capacity) are the exception to the rule and that is why we (metaphorically speaking) look up to them.
__________________
These are my principles and if you don't like them------well, I have others. (Groucho Marx)
|
|
|
11-09-2012, 10:29
|
#19
|
Resting in Peace
Join Date: Oct 2005
Location: In a state of confusion
Posts: 36,973
Liked: 715 times
Rep Power: 76552
|
Re: Have the Olympics changed your World?
Quote:
Originally Posted by Houseboy
The Paralympians were phenomenal!! Nothing can take away from their amazing achievements. However the question is continually being posed now about whether or not this will change people's views of the disabled.
I think not!
Why should it? Have the achievements of the Olympics made anyone change their attitudes to the able-bodied? The thing is that the paralympians are an extremely special breed, just as their able-bodied counterparts are. Just because someone with no legs can run faster than me (a truly wonderful achievement) doesn't mean that I or anyone else will look any differently open an "ordinary" disabled person. The mind just doesn't work like that. People who achieve greatness (in whatever capacity) are the exception to the rule and that is why we (metaphorically speaking) look up to them.
|
What I did watch I preferred the Paralympics, just watching on Saturday night was mind blowing, how people with some bad disabilities could perform in the way they, Danny Weir in the 5000m wheelchair race was just as inspiring as Mo Farah was a few weeks earlier, truely great to see
__________________
35 YEARS AND COUNTING
|
|
|
11-09-2012, 12:59
|
#20
|
Full Member
Join Date: Aug 2012
Posts: 228
Liked: 0 times
Rep Power: 3478
|
Re: Have the Olympics changed your World?
Quote:
Originally Posted by jaysay
What I did watch I preferred the Paralympics, just watching on Saturday night was mind blowing, how people with some bad disabilities could perform in the way they, Danny Weir in the 5000m wheelchair race was just as inspiring as Mo Farah was a few weeks earlier, truely great to see
|
I am guilty of not watching too much but that is because, as I said before, I'm not too much into the Olympics as a whole, but what I did see was inspiring. It does kind of put our own lives into perspective a little bit and, although I don't subscribe overly to the "other people are worse off than you" argument, I did feel that moaning about my life seems a little self-indulgent and self-pitying, after seeing people who could easily have said "sod it" to life actually grasp it by the proverbials and say "you're not going to beat me".
Well done to them all!!!
__________________
These are my principles and if you don't like them------well, I have others. (Groucho Marx)
|
|
|
11-09-2012, 16:20
|
#21
|
Give, give, give member
Join Date: Feb 2005
Location: Overlookin' ducks & geese
Posts: 32,411
Liked: 27 times
Rep Power: 16468
|
Re: Have the Olympics changed your World?
Quote:
Originally Posted by Houseboy
The Paralympians were phenomenal!! Nothing can take away from their amazing achievements. However the question is continually being posed now about whether or not this will change people's views of the disabled.
I think not!
Why should it? Have the achievements of the Olympics made anyone change their attitudes to the able-bodied? The thing is that the paralympians are an extremely special breed, just as their able-bodied counterparts are. Just because someone with no legs can run faster than me (a truly wonderful achievement) doesn't mean that I or anyone else will look any differently open an "ordinary" disabled person. The mind just doesn't work like that. People who achieve greatness (in whatever capacity) are the exception to the rule and that is why we (metaphorically speaking) look up to them.
|
I think the Paralympics will have shown even more people that having 'a' disability doesn't necessarily mean you can't be truly brilliant in other areas. Anyone who watched The Best of Men, about the founding of the games, and how many people were literally left to rot in some cases, will already know just how much attitudes have changed over recent years.
No way do I class myself as being 'disabled', though I suppose I am on paper because I have Parkinson's. My only real natural talent was for art, which I can no longer do. Though I was lucky enough to have earned a crust by it until I retired. I'm never going to run a marathon, but I have found other things to fill that gap, that I'm better at, than I ever thought I could be.
If they ever make 'one non-dominant handed cutting-to-the-quick typing' an event, I might even make it into the team, and be there at Rio 2016.
__________________
'If you're going to be a Kant, be the very best Kant there is my son.'
Johann Georg Kant, father of Immanuel Kant, philosopher.
|
|
|
11-09-2012, 17:38
|
#22
|
Resting in Peace
Join Date: Oct 2005
Location: In a state of confusion
Posts: 36,973
Liked: 715 times
Rep Power: 76552
|
Re: Have the Olympics changed your World?
Quote:
Originally Posted by garinda
I think the Paralympics will have shown even more people that having 'a' disability doesn't necessarily mean you can't be truly brilliant in other areas. Anyone who watched The Best of Men, about the founding of the games, and how many people were literally left to rot in some cases, will already know just how much attitudes have changed over recent years.
No way do I class myself as being 'disabled', though I suppose I am on paper because I have Parkinson's. My only real natural talent was for art, which I can no longer do. Though I was lucky enough to have earned a crust by it until I retired. I'm never going to run a marathon, but I have found other things to fill that gap, that I'm better at, than I ever thought I could be.
If they ever make 'one non-dominant handed cutting-to-the-quick typing' an event, I might even make it into the team, and be there at Rio 2016.
|
I'll join the one finger typing team Rindi
__________________
35 YEARS AND COUNTING
|
|
|
Other sites of interest.. |
More town sites.. |
|
|
All times are GMT. The time now is 09:21.
© 2003-2013 AccringtonWeb.com
|
|